Backstaging Modern Chinese Theatre
Intellectuals, Amateurs, and Cultural Entrepreneurs, 1910s–1940s
Abstract
Modern Chinese theatre once entailed a variety of forms, but now it primarily refers to spoken drama, or huaju. Backstaging Modern Chinese Theatre looks beyond scripts to examine visuality, acoustics, and performance between the two World Wars, the period when huaju gained canonical status. The backstage in this study expands from being a physical place offstage to a culturally and historically constructed social network that encompasses theatre networks, academies, and government institutions—as well as the collective work of dramatists, amateurs, and cultural entrepreneurs. Early huaju was not a mere imitation of Western realist theatre, as it is commonly understood, but a creative synthesis of Chinese and Western aesthetics. Charting huaju’s evolution from American colleges to China’s coastal cities and then to its rural hinterland, Man He demonstrates how the formation of modern Chinese theatre challenges dominant understandings of modernism and brings China to the center of discussions on transnational modernities and world theatres.
Keywords
huaju, xiqu, spoken drama, wenmingxi, Beijing opera, Ibsen, backstage, peasant theater, mobile theater, performance, realism, modernism, amateur, professionalization, popularization, Hong Shen, Tian Han, Yu Shangyuan, Xiong Foxi, cosmopolitanism, nationalism, left-wing, May Fourth, Republican China, Nanjing Decade, World War II, overseas students, cultural entrepreneur, National Drama School, CCP, KMT, The Ohio State University, Ding Xian, Chongqing, ShanghaiDOI
10.3998/mpub.12775372ISBN
9780472905119, 9780472077557, 9780472057559Publisher
University of Michigan PressPublisher website
https://www.press.umich.edu/Publication date and place
2025Classification
Performing arts
Theatre studies
Asian history


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